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Monday, July 30, 2012

Gandhara relics: Stolen or not, police and archaeologists can’t agree on one number

By Our Correspondent
Published in The Express Tribune, July 22nd, 2012.
KARACHI: The police and archaeology experts seem to be at loggerheads
over the actual number of Gandhara relics seized earlier in the month.
Amid press reports that some artefacts have been stolen from the
Awami Colony police station, both parties associated with the case are
coming up with a different total for the statues.
While National Museum’s director Mohammad Shah Bokhari claims to have
photographed and documented around 330 pieces earlier, the newly posted
SHO at the police station, Hatim Marwat, says there are only 308
artefacts.
The police had seized a container full of Buddhist relics on July 6 and
then found some more in a Korangi warehouse on July 8. As the police
were investigating the case, archaeology experts, including officials
from Sindh culture department and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s archaeology
department, were called in to record the details of the seized relics.
Many of the Buddhist relics thought to be of the third century turned
out to be fake, making it even more difficult for archaeologists to
determine their exact origin. According to an antiquities officer,
experts are yet to determine how many of the Buddhist relics are fake.
“We need resources such as forensic analysis to determine the
authenticity of each of the relic,” he said. “Right now we don’t have
that facility.”
Some of the ancient relics had even been damaged due to the careless
handling by police officers and labourers during shifting. The artefacts
were dumped in a compound of the Awami Colony police station. Reports
in the press suggested that piece by piece, the relics were being stolen
due to the casual security at the police station. There were reports
that three statues have gone missing, but there has been no official
confirmation.
Awami Colony SHO Marwat told The Express Tribune that all of the seized
relics were documented by the Sindh culture department officials and
have documentation numbers on them.
“It is untrue that artefacts have been stolen [from the police
station],” he said. “To our knowledge, there are only 308 pieces. We
don’t have information about the rest.”
However, National Museum’s Bokhari told The Express Tribune that
photographic evidence and records were available of 330 artefacts. If
some have gone missing, it is the responsibility of the police, he
added.
“The police have their custody, and we can’t keep check all day and
night to see where the idols are and how they are being handled,”
Bokhari said. “If they have been stolen, the police are to be blamed
[for it].”
The artefacts will remain at the police station until the next court
hearing on July 24. It is expected that the court will handed them over
to the culture department.
When asked why the Gandhara relics were dumped in the courtyard, the
SHO replied: “The statues are not watermelons that need to be kept in a
refrigerator. Look at their size and weight. Where else would we keep
them?”
Police sources said that the former SHO was transferred as some
statues had gone missing from the police station. But Marwat denied
this, saying his predecessor’s posting was a routine matter.
sourse: Buddhist art News